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Bilderberg Planning
To Put the Squeeze on U.S. Taxpayers

American
Free Press | May 19 2004

The internationalist
Bilderberg group has called for higher U.S. taxes in the past, but this
year "American guilt" will be the theme behind the locked and
guarded gates of the plush resort in Stresa, Italy, June 3-6.

Every year since 1954, Bilderbergers
have met regularly at various locations around the world, always in secrecy,
often at resorts controlled by either the Rockefeller or Rothschild families.
See "Bilderberg Has Long, Secret History" for a detailed history
of the shadowy globalist confab.

This year at Bilderberg, luminaries
will discuss how to make Americans feel guilty for not throwing enough tax
dollars around the world. This reflects the Bilderberg commitment to shame
Americans for their high standard of living while elevating that of the
rest of the world until all is equal on the global plantation.

The now defunct Spotlight reported
in 1991 that talks at that year's Bilderberg focused on getting President
Bush the Elder - who belonged to the brother group, the Trilateral Commission
- to increase U.S. taxes. Subsequently, Bush broke his famous pledge of
"read my lips, no new taxes" and agreed to a tax increase that
may have cost him re-election.

But through their controlled
newspapers and broadcast networks, Bilderberg wants to condition the public
mind in America to accept higher taxes on so-called humanitarian grounds."

One weapon that will be used
behind the locked and guarded gates of the Grand Des Iles Borromees is a
new report but the Center for Global Development. Its "Commitment to
Development Index" measures how good 21 rich nations are to poor, backward
countries. Of the 21, the United States was ranked in foreign aid.

The Center for Global Development
is staffed fy former bankers and globalists and receives much of its funding
from the Rockefeller Foundation, Citigroup, the World Bank and the UN.

TOP SPOTS

"Three small nations, the
Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden, beat out the world's largest economic powers
to hold the top spots," the center reported. "Fourth-place United
Kingdom leads all Group of Seven nations, followed by Canada, which holds
sixth place due in large part to its development-friendly migration policies,"
the center reported.

Critics of Canada's migration
policies say that terrorist can get off an airplane there unchallenged and
stroll across the U.S. border. U.S. officials have been concerned about
Canada's border since the arrest of Ahmed Ressam who was caught by U.S.
Customs trying to sneak explosives across the U.S. Border in Washington
state as part of a plot to blow of Los Angeles' airport. Nevertheless, Bilderberg
wants a "world without borders."

"The United States follows
in seventh place," the center reported. ‘The United States contributes
relatively little in foreign aid given the size of its economy and garners
poor environmental scores."

The low rating given the United
States on the environment is attributed to the Senate's refusal to ratify
the Kyoto treaty, which economists contend would have resulted in economic
hardship on many American small businesses because of the stringent rules
that would be imposed. Kyoto set exemptions for developing countries, including
Mexico and other Latin American countries, which would have to make no sacrifice
and were eager to sign.

Although President Bill Clinton,
a Bilderberg member, signed the Kyoto treaty, it was rejected overwhelmingly
in a Senate test vote. President bush has not sent the treaty to the Senate
for ratification.

The report is available
on the center's web site, cgdev.org, and is scheduled to appear in the latest
issue of Foreign Policy, which is published by the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, which is always represented at the secret Bilderberg
meetings.